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The man was charged with murder or complicity in the murder of Anne-Elisabeth Hagen. Police confirmed Saturday night that the charge has been changed.
– The position has been changed to assist in severe deprivation of liberty. We have no further comment on the charges now, prosecutor Haris Hrenovica of the Eastern Police District writes in a press release Saturday night.
For VG, the man’s advocate, Dag Svensson, says he was informed that the charges had changed when the interrogations began on Saturday.
“They release him because the police do not consider that there is a danger of confiscation,” writes Hrenovica.
The man rejects the criminal charges and described the charge as absurd, the Svensson defender told Dagbladet on Friday.
More questions
Several interrogations were carried out last Saturday afternoon, where the man explained himself to the police, according to the prosecutor.
On Saturday afternoon, the defender was in place at the Kripos facility in Oslo. Dagbladet attempted to obtain a comment from Svensson when he left the premises, but declined to comment. Nor on the phone.
Svensson tells NTB that he is satisfied with the launch.
– You should try to get home and relax.
According to the defense, the 30-year-old defendant must wait for the police to call him for further questioning.
– We said we are asking.
Anne-Elisabeth Hagen’s husband Tom Hagen (70) was charged last week and arrested for the murder. He was released on Friday, but the police maintained his charges against him. Police believe the billionaire husband helped abduct a finger to hide the murder.
Among other things, ransom was demanded in the crypto currency Monero, while the requirement must have been promoted in codes.
Cryptocurrency experience
According to police, the arrested man in his 30s has a relationship with Tom Hagen, and police say they are familiar with the man’s experience in IT and cryptocurrency.
The defendant has shown great interest in cryptocurrency on the Internet. Among other things, he has run his own IT company.
Police say they did not want to comment further Saturday night for the investigation.
The killer man in his 30s has lived in various parts of eastern Norway, but was originally associated with Romerike. On Friday night, the police cracked down on a house in Romerike, about a half-hour drive from the couple’s Hagen residence in Sloraveien in Lørenskog.
The man has not been convicted in the past.
Defender Svensson declined to comment on the relationship between his client and Tom Hagen, but according to Dagbladet’s information, the two should not have a close relationship.
Dagbladet updates the case
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